Bio


I am a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University.

My primary areas of expertise are Medical Image Computing and Mechanical Design.
During my doctoral studies, I focused on "3D NIR-II/SWIR fluorescence imaging for small animals in preclinical studies".
I successfully developed 3D NIR-II/SWIR fluorescence imaging using single-camera stereo vision to study the biodistribution of mice.

At present, I am working on a project related to NIR-II fluorescence imaging in surgical guidance.
Please feel free to contact me if you are interested in collaborating on research.

Honors & Awards


  • Honorary Member, The Phi Tau Phi Scholastic Honor Society of the Republic of China (2024/03)
  • Taiwan Science and Technology Hub@Stanford Postdoctoral Fellowship, Taiwan ST Hub@Stanford (2024/02)
  • First prize, 2023 Annual Thesis Competition on English Oral Presentation, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University (2023/06)
  • MOST Scholarship Pilot Program, Ministry of Science and Technology, MOST (2019/08)
  • NEW DEANTRONICS LTD. excellent scholarship, NEW DEANTRONICS LTD. (2018/07)
  • College Student Research Creativity Award, Ministry of Science and Technology, MOST (2017/07)

Professional Education


  • Doctor of Philosophy, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University (2024)
  • Ph.D., National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Biomedical engineering (2024)

Stanford Advisors


All Publications


  • Ultrabright Dibenzofluoran-Based Polymer Dots with NIR-IIa Emission Maxima and Unusual Large Stokes Shifts for 3D Rotational Stereo Imaging. Advanced healthcare materials Chowdhury, P., Lu, Z. Y., Su, S. P., Liu, M. H., Lin, C. Y., Wang, M. W., Luo, Y. C., Lee, Y. J., Chiang, H. K., Chan, Y. H. 2024; 13 (20): e2400606

    Abstract

    Emerging organic molecules with emissions in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) region are garnering significant attention. Unfortunately, achieving accountable organic emission intensity over the NIR-IIa (1300 nm) region faces challenges due to the intrinsic energy gap law. Up to the current stage, all reported organic NIR-IIa emitters belong to polymethine-based dyes with small Stokes shifts (<50 nm) and low quantum yield (QY; ≤0.015%). However, such polymethines have proved to cause self-absorption with constrained emission brightness, limiting advanced development in deep-tissue imaging. Here a new NIR-IIa scaffold based on rigid and highly conjugated dibenzofluoran core terminated by amino-containing moieties that reveal emission peaks of 1230-1305 nm is designed. The QY is at least 10 times higher than all synthesized or reported NIR-IIa polymethines with extraordinarily large Stokes shifts of 370-446 nm. DBF-BJ is further prepared as a polymer dot to demonstrate its in vivo 3D stereo imaging of mouse vasculature with a 1400 nm long-pass filter.

    View details for DOI 10.1002/adhm.202400606

    View details for PubMedID 38683681

  • The Emergence of Tumor-Initiating Cells in an Advanced Hypopharyngeal Tumor Model Exhibits Enhanced Angiogenesis and Nuclear Factor Erythroid 2-Related Factor 2-Associated Antioxidant Effects. Antioxidants & redox signaling Lin, M. Y., Wang, C. Y., Chan, Y. H., Su, S. P., Chiang, H. K., Yang, M. H., Lee, Y. J. 2024

    Abstract

    Aims: Hypopharyngeal cancer (HPC) is associated with the worst prognosis of all head and neck cancers and is typically identified in an advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. While oxidative stress might contribute to the onset of HPC in patients using tobacco or alcohol, the extent of this influence and the characteristics of HPC cells in advanced stage remain to be investigated. In this study, we explored whether HPC cells survived from necrotic xenograft tumors at late stage would display increased tumor resistance along with altered tolerance to oxidative stress. Results: The remnant living HPC cells isolated from a late-stage xenograft tumor, named FaDu ex vivo cells, showed stronger chemo- and radioresistance, tumorigenesis, and invasiveness compared with parental FaDu cells. FaDu ex vivo cells also displayed increased angiogenic ability after re-transplantation in mice visualized by in vivo near infrared-II fluorescence imaging modality. Moreover, FaDu ex vivo cells exhibited significant tumor-initiating cell (TIC)-related properties accompanied by a reduction of the level of reactive oxygen species, which was associated with the upregulation of transcription factor nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2). Interestingly, inhibition of Nrf2 by the RNA interference and the chemical inhibitor could reduce the TIC-related properties of FaDu ex vivo cells. Innovation: Oxidative stress potentially initiates HPC, but elevation of Nrf2-associated antioxidant mechanisms would be essential to mitigate this effect for promoting and sustaining the stemness of HPC at the advanced stage. Conclusion: Present data suggest that the antioxidant potency of advanced HPC would be a therapeutic target for the design of adjuvant treatment.

    View details for DOI 10.1089/ars.2023.0310

    View details for PubMedID 38661516

  • Development of an integrated dual-modality 3D bioluminescence tomography and ultrasound imaging system for small animal tumor imaging. Optics express Su, S. P., Yang, Y. Z., Chiang, H. K. 2024; 32 (4): 5607-5620

    Abstract

    Ultrasound (US) is a valuable tool for imaging soft tissue and visualizing tumor contours. Taking the benefits of US, we presented an integrated dual-modality imaging system in this paper that achieves three-dimensional (3D) bioluminescence tomography (BLT) with multi-view bioluminescence images and 3D US imaging. The purpose of this system is to perform non-invasive, long-term monitoring of tumor growth in 3D images. US images can enhance the accuracy of the 3D BLT reconstruction and the bioluminescence dose within an object. Furthermore, an integrated co-registered scanning geometry was used to capture the fused BLT and US images. We validated the system with an in vivo experiment involving tumor-bearing mice. The results demonstrated the feasibility of reconstructing 3D BLT images in the tumor region using 3D US images. We used the dice coefficient and locational error to evaluate the similarity between the reconstructed source region and the actual source region. The dice coefficient was 88.5%, and the locational error was 0.4 mm when comparing the BLT and 3D US images. The hybrid BLT/US system could provide significant benefits for reconstructing the source of tumor location and conducting quantitative analysis of tumor size.

    View details for DOI 10.1364/OE.507659

    View details for PubMedID 38439282

  • Dual-Modality Bioluminescence and Ultrasound 3D 360-Degree Imaging System for Small Animal Tumor Imaging Using Homemade Transducers Su, S., Chiang, H., Boehm, B., Bottenus, N. SPIE-INT SOC OPTICAL ENGINEERING. 2024

    View details for DOI 10.1117/12.3009797

    View details for Web of Science ID 001223524400021

  • A Novel Injection Protocol Using Voluven®-Assisted Indocyanine Green with Improved Near-Infrared Fluorescence Guidance in Breast Cancer Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping-A Translational Study. Annals of surgical oncology Hsieh, Y. C., Guo, K. W., Wang, M. W., Su, S. P., Syu, Y. H., Huang, C. S., Chan, Y. H. 2023; 30 (13): 8419-8427

    Abstract

    Near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence-guided surgery with indocyanine green (ICG) has been demonstrated to provide high sensitivity in sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) for breast cancer but has several limitations, such as unstable pharmacokinetics, limited fluorescence brightness, and undesired diffusion to neighboring tissues. This paper investigates the use of Voluven® as the solvent for ICG fluorescence-guided SLNB (ICG-SLNB).The photophysical properties of ICG in water and Voluven® were evaluated in laboratory experiments and in a mouse model. Nine patients with early breast cancer underwent subareolar injection of diluted ICG (0.25 mg/ml) for ICG-SLNB. Six of the nine patients received ICG dissolved in Voluven® (ICG:Voluven®), while three were administered ICG dissolved in water (ICG:water); a repetitive injection-observation protocol was followed for all patients. The mapping image quality was evaluated.Laboratory experiments and in vivo mouse study showed improved fluorescence and better targeting using Voluven® as the solvent. ICG-SLNB with a repetitive injection-observation protocol was successfully performed in all nine patients. ICG:Voluven® administration had an overall better signal-to-background ratio (SBR) in sequential sentinel lymph nodes. The rates of transportation within the lymphatics were also improved using ICG:Voluven® compared with ICG:water.From basic research to animal models to in-human trial, our study proposes a repetitive injection-observation technique with ICG:Voluven®, which is characterized by better transportation and more stable mapping quality for ICG-SLNB in breast cancer patients.

    View details for DOI 10.1245/s10434-023-14129-4

    View details for PubMedID 37605084

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10625936

  • Realization of NIR-II 3D whole-body contour and tumor blood vessels imaging in small animals using rotational stereo vision technique. Journal of biomedical optics Su, S. P., Lee, Y. C., Lin, S. L., Li, Y. X., Lin, M. Y., Chan, Y. H., Lee, Y. J., Yang, M. H., Chiang, H. K. 2023; 28 (9): 094807

    Abstract

    Optical imaging in the second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1000 to 1700 nm) region is capable of deep tumor vascular imaging due to low light scattering and low autofluorescence. Non-invasive real-time NIR-II fluorescence imaging is instrumental in monitoring tumor status.Our aim is to develop an NIR-II fluorescence rotational stereo imaging system for 360-deg three-dimensional (3D) imaging of whole-body blood vessels, tumor vessels, and 3D contour of mice.Our study combined an NIR-II camera with a 360-deg rotational stereovision technique for tumor vascular imaging and 3D surface contour for mice. Moreover, self-made NIR-II fluorescent polymer dots were applied in high-contrast NIR-II vascular imaging, along with a 3D blood vessel enhancement algorithm for acquiring high-resolution 3D blood vessel images. The system was validated with a custom-made 3D printing phantom and in vivo experiments of 4T1 tumor-bearing mice.The results showed that the NIR-II 3D 360-deg tumor blood vessels and mice contour could be reconstructed with 0.15 mm spatial resolution, 0.3 mm depth resolution, and 5 mm imaging depth in an ex vivo experiment.The pioneering development of an NIR-II 3D 360-deg rotational stereo imaging system was first applied in small animal tumor blood vessel imaging and 3D surface contour imaging, demonstrating its capability of reconstructing tumor blood vessels and mice contour. Therefore, the 3D imaging system can be instrumental in monitoring tumor therapy effects.

    View details for DOI 10.1117/1.JBO.28.9.094807

    View details for PubMedID 37234194

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC10208585

  • Effect of carbon spacer length on the antibacterial properties of zwitterionic poly(sulfobetaine) type copolymeric brushes and their application in wound healing. Biomaterials science Dhingra, S., Su, S. P., Chan, Y. H., Saha, S. 2023; 11 (12): 4308-4326

    Abstract

    Creating infection resistant polymer brushes possessing antiadhesive, bactericidal and cell-compatible features can be regarded as a promising approach to prevent biomaterial-associated infections. In this work, polysulfobetaine type zwitterionic homo- and copolymer brushes with varying spacer lengths (charge separation distance between zwitterions, n = 3, 6 or 12) were allowed to grow onto a tartaric acid based aliphatic polyester substrate using surface initiated atom transfer radical polymerization. All of the brush modified surfaces were thoroughly characterized and assessed for their anti-infective performances in vitro. Strikingly, a suitable copolymer composition, i.e., polyZ6-co-Z12 (50/50 copolymer of polysulfobetaine methacrylates with 6 and 12 spacer lengths), was observed to inhibit bacterial growth completely and its activity was sustained for a long time (>3 months). Surprisingly, its antibacterial effect was found to be bactericidal, as is evident from live-dead staining of residual dead bacterial cells that can be easily released by exposing the surface to salt solution, thereby regenerating the surface. However, all of the other copolymer as well as homopolymer brushes exhibited bacteriostatic behavior. An attempt was made to understand the peculiar behavior of this particular brush composition. Nevertheless, the biocidal and also protein repellent brush did not display any cytotoxicity towards human cells, making it an ideal substrate to be used as an infection resistant biomedical implant. Animal studies further confirmed that this particular copolymeric brush modified scaffold can be a promising anti-infective wound dressing material with rapid wound healing effects as compared to the unmodified scaffold.

    View details for DOI 10.1039/d2bm01506d

    View details for PubMedID 37066612

  • Rational Design of Asymmetric Polymethines to Attain NIR(II) Bioimaging at >1100 nm. Journal of the American Chemical Society Pan, H. M., Wu, C. C., Lin, C. Y., Hsu, C. S., Tsai, Y. C., Chowdhury, P., Wang, C. H., Chang, K. H., Yang, C. H., Liu, M. H., Chen, Y. C., Su, S. P., Lee, Y. J., Chiang, H. K., Chan, Y. H., Chou, P. T. 2023; 145 (1): 516-526

    Abstract

    Organic molecules having emission in the NIR(II) region are emergent and receiving enormous attention. Unfortunately, attaining accountable organic emission intensity around the NIR(II) region is hampered by the dominant internal conversion operated by the energy gap law, where the emission energy gap and the associated internal reorganization energy λint play key roles. Up to the current stage, the majority of the reported organic NIR(II) emitters belong to those polymethines terminated by two symmetric chromophores. Such a design has proved to have a small λint that greatly suppresses the internal conversion. However, the imposition of symmetric chromophores is stringent, limiting further development of organic NIR(II) dyes in diversity and versatility. Here, we propose a new concept where as far as the emissive state of the any asymmetric polymethines contains more or less equally transition density between two terminated chromophores, λint can be as small as that of the symmetric polymethines. To prove the concept, we synthesize a series of new polymethines terminated by xanthen-9-yl-benzoic acid and 2,4-diphenylthiopyrylium derivatives, yielding AJBF1112 and AEBF1119 that reveal emission peak wavelength at 1112 and 1119 nm, respectively. The quantum yield is higher than all synthesized symmetric polymethines of 2,4-diphenylthiopyrylium derivatives (SC1162, 1182, 1185, and 1230) in this study. λint were calculated to be as small as 6.2 and 7.3 kcal/mol for AJBF1112 and AEBF1119, respectively, proving the concept. AEBF1119 was further prepared as a polymer dot to demonstrate its in vitro specific cellular imaging and in vivo tumor/bone targeting in the NIR(II) region.

    View details for DOI 10.1021/jacs.2c10860

    View details for PubMedID 36562565

  • TADF-based NIR-II semiconducting polymer dots for in vivo 3D bone imaging. Chemical science Hsu, K. F., Su, S. P., Lu, H. F., Liu, M. H., Chang, Y. J., Lee, Y. J., Chiang, H. K., Hsu, C. P., Lu, C. W., Chan, Y. H. 2022; 13 (34): 10074-10081

    Abstract

    Intraoperative fluorescence imaging in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) region heralds a new era in image-guided surgery since the success in the first-in-human liver-tumor surgery guided by NIR-II fluorescence. Limited by the conventional small organic NIR dyes such as FDA-approved indocyanine green with suboptimal NIR-II fluorescence and non-targeting ability, the resulting shallow penetration depth and high false positive diagnostic values have been challenging. Described here is the design of NIR-II emissive semiconducting polymer dots (Pdots) incorporated with thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) moieties to exhibit emission maxima of 1064-1100 nm and fluorescence quantum yields of 0.40-1.58% in aqueous solutions. To further understand how the TADF units affect the molecular packing and the resulting optical properties of Pdots, in-depth and thorough density-functional theory calculations were carried out to better understand the underlying mechanisms. We then applied these Pdots for in vivo 3D bone imaging in mice. This work provides a direction for future designs of NIR-II Pdots and holds promising applications for bone-related diseases.

    View details for DOI 10.1039/d2sc03271f

    View details for PubMedID 36128252

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC9430315

  • Development of Stereo NIR-II Fluorescence Imaging System for 3D Tumor Vasculature in Small Animals. Biosensors Su, S. P., Lin, S. L., Chan, Y. H., Lee, Y. J., Lee, Y. C., Zeng, P. X., Li, Y. X., Yang, M. H., Chiang, H. K. 2022; 12 (2)

    Abstract

    Near-infrared-II (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) fluorescence imaging boasts high spatial resolution and deep tissue penetration due to low light scattering, reduced photon absorption, and low tissue autofluorescence. NIR-II biological imaging is applied mainly in the noninvasive visualization of blood vessels and tumors in deep tissue. In the study, a stereo NIR-II fluorescence imaging system was developed for acquiring three-dimension (3D) images on tumor vasculature in real-time, on top of the development of fluorescent semiconducting polymer dots (IR-TPE Pdots) with ultra-bright NIR-II fluorescence (1000-1400 nm) and high stability to perform long-term fluorescence imaging. The NIR-II imaging system only consists of one InGaAs camera and a moving stage to simulate left-eye view and right-eye view for the construction of 3D in-depth blood vessel images. The system was validated with blood vessel phantom of tumor-bearing mice and was applied successfully in obtaining 3D blood vessel images with 0.6 mm- and 5 mm-depth resolution and 0.15 mm spatial resolution. The NIR-II stereo vision provides precise 3D information on the tumor microenvironment and blood vessel path.

    View details for DOI 10.3390/bios12020085

    View details for PubMedID 35200345

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC8869613

  • Molecular Design of Ultrabright Semiconducting Polymer Dots with High NIR-II Fluorescence for 3D Tumor Mapping. Advanced healthcare materials Li, Y. X., Su, S. P., Yang, C. H., Liu, M. H., Lo, P. H., Chen, Y. C., Hsu, C. P., Lee, Y. J., Chiang, H. K., Chan, Y. H. 2021; 10 (24): e2100993

    Abstract

    Fluorescence probes emitting in the second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1000-1700 nm) window with the ability for deep-tissue imaging in mammals herald a new era in surgical methodology. However, the brightness of these NIR-II probes is still far from satisfactory due to their low fluorescence quantum yields (QYs), preventing the observation of high-resolution images such as whole-organ vascular networks in real time. Described here is the molecular engineering of a series of semiconducting polymer dots (Pdots) incorporated with aggregation-induced emission moieties to exhibit the QYs as high as 14% in the NIR-II window. Benefiting from the ultrahigh brightness, a 1400 nm long-pass filter is utilized to realize in vivo 3D tumor mapping in mice. To further understand how the geometrical and electron structures of the semiconducting polymers affect their optical properties, the in-depth and thorough density-functional theory calculations are performed to interpret the experimental results. This study lays the groundwork for further molecular design of highly bright NIR-II Pdots.

    View details for DOI 10.1002/adhm.202100993

    View details for PubMedID 34549550

  • Small-animal 360-deg fluorescence diffuse optical tomography using structural prior information from ultrasound imaging. Journal of biomedical optics Lo, P. A., Su, S. P., Chiang, H. K. 2020; 25 (3): 1-11

    Abstract

    We demonstrate dual modality of free-space fluorescence diffuse optical tomography (FDOT) and handheld ultrasound (US) imaging to reveal both functional and structural information in small animals. FDOT is a noninvasive method for examining the fluorophore inside an object from the light distribution of the surface. In FDOT, a 660-nm continuous wave diode laser was used as an excitation source and an electron-multiplying charge-coupled device (EMCCD) was used for fluorescence data acquisition. Both the laser and EMCCD were mounted on a 360-deg rotation gantry for the transmission optical data collection. The structural information is obtained from a 6- to 17-MHz handheld US linear transducer by single-side access and conducts in the reconstruction as soft priors. The rotation ranges from 0 deg to 360 deg; different rotation degrees, object positions, and parameters were determined for comparison. Both phantom and tissue phantom results demonstrate that fluorophore distribution can be recovered accurately and quantitatively using this imaging system. Finally, an animal study confirms that the system can extract a dual-modality image, validating its feasibility for further in vivo experiments. In all experiments, the error and standard deviation decrease as the rotation degree is increased and the error was reduced to 10% when the rotation degree was increased over 135 deg.

    View details for DOI 10.1117/1.JBO.25.3.036001

    View details for PubMedID 32129028

    View details for PubMedCentralID PMC7052526

  • 3D Fluorescence Tomography Combined with Ultrasound Imaging System in Small Animal Study Su, S., Chiang, H., Lin, K. P., Magjarevic, R., DeCarvalho, P. SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG. 2020: 166-173